Sunday, October 30, 2022

The Picture-Story

CAUTION: This Essay Contains Cliffhanger


Photographs, which fiddle with the scale of the world,
themselves get reduced, blown up, cropped, retouched,
doctored, tricked out. They age, plagued by the usual ills of paper 
objects; they disappear; they become valuable, and get
bought and sold; they are reproduced.

Photographs, which package the world, seem to invite
packaging. They are stuck in albums, framed and set
on tables, tacked on walls, projected as slides.
Newspapers and magazines feature them;
cops alphabetize them; museums exhibit 
them; publishers compile them.”

– Susan Sontag

* * *



Norman Rockwell’s famous triple-selfie


The Picture-Story

by Jamie Jobb

An avid mountain-climber who grew up in the shadows of Oregon’s Cascade Range, John Lindstrom was a fish-out-of-water in Gainesville Florida where he’d moved in the late-1960s to teach students like me photojournalism at the University of Florida. With the state’s highest elevation at a mere 345 feet above the sea, the Sunshine State offers scant challenge for serious West Coast mountaineers. 

John only lasted three years in Gainesville before he and his wife Deanne abandoned Florida’s flatscape and returned home to the familiar topography of the Wild West Coast. John and Deanne were largely responsible for me moving west at that time. Their home was a library of photography books chock full of striking images of The Great American West – something which, at that point in my life, I held only a dim awareness. 

My uncles in Ohio had their annual Wyoming hunting trip – that was the extent of my knowledge of that fabled landscape, until I found John’s books full of photos by Ansel Adams, Imogen Cunningham, Wynn Bullock, Edward Weston, his sons Cole and Brett – the so-called “f64 photographers”.  Although they traveled to world taking pictures, these artists were drawn to the crisp light and staggering seaside-landscapes of California’s Big Sur, particularly its northern-most location: Point Lobos, just south of Carmel. 

Recently, I was reminded of something John taught us in our photojournalism classes, which involved class discussions about slides he’d selected from famous Magnum photographers and projected for our contemplation as nascent photojournalists. 

We talked about the composition, the framing, the light, the shadows. We discussed where it was shot, the background and intention of the professional cameraman who took it. We talked about technique, how to approach subjects in the street. In other words, we discussed everything it took for the photograph to find the photojournalist. 

But first, let’s leave John’s lecture and join him for a little mountain adventure.

* * *


    “John!” … 

I’m hanging, literally at the end of my rope.

Thirteen thousand feet above sea level. 

Stuck alone onto the shear southeastern cliff face of Williams Mountain.

We’re in Colorado’s Hunter-Fryingpan Wilderness, just east of Aspen. 

My ten fingers grip two small rock outcroppings.

And both my hiking-boots extend far onto two other little ledges. 

Stretched spread-eagle against the sheer rock face, I yell up into the sky. 

    “John!” … 

Nobody answers.


[NOTE: this was 32 years before Tom Waits 
wrote “God’s Away on Business”.]

The sky continues, not responding.

    “John!” … 

Our only communication is rope sign-language. 

John tugs the rope wrapped round my chest, politely “asking” me: 

    “Are you there?” 

… another tug from above:

    What’s taking you so long?”

So THIS is mountain climbing?

So much FUN to be hanging on for dear life, by a thread! 

* * *

John and Deanne are moving back to the West Coast. But we’re with them in Colorado for the summer on our way out west for the first time. John is teaching a mountaineering survival course at Colorado Rocky Mountain School in Carbondale. I’ve been in Colorado a couple months at that point and had learned to love these Rocky Mountains. So, of course, when John invites me to go backpacking with his students on a Survival Weekend, I say: 

    “Sure!”

Once we establish base-camp, John sets out his students in roving teams to fend for themselves on their wild wilderness weekend. They’ll fan out in a large circle around Williams Mountain, while we remain at the center where the survival-school students could find us if needed. Otherwise, they’re on their own. This was summer 1970, so nobody had a cell phone to help them survive. 

After they leave, John then turns his attention to our base-camp survival duties: time to teach me rock climbing on a big boulder – perhaps 30 feet tall – hovering over our campsite. 

Rock climbing is quite simple: grab onto the rock face with all the grip you got! 

Then climb up. 

That means both feet and both hands. 


[NOTE: this was three decades before ubiquitous
suburban-storefront “mountain-climbing” walls.] 

Back on the cliff, my eyes look for any small outcrop from the rugged rock face that could support my weight on one of those four points at the edges of my splayed body. 

With his experience, John was able to clamber up to the peak with our rope in no time. But this is my first-ever attempt at mountain-climbing and I’m stuck here. 

One fact is locked into my mind. 

In our base-camp rock-climbing class the day before, John had said to remember one thing: never overextend your reach on a rock wall. 

Well, I’m at that uncomfortable point now where I MUST overextend my reach. 

Both hands, and both feet. Stretched to their limits.

Only two directions are available to me: up OR down. 

At the base of the cliff is a half-mile of rocky rubble extending deep into the valley below – I know because I’m looking right into it. That slope is a 45-degree angle. Falling off the cliff would create too much momentum for my carcass rolling down to the bottom of that dead end.

    Don’t look down!

Hung there in mid-air, there’s no close outcrop for either of my hands or feet to easily reach. I’m shaking at the thought of being stuck here forever. 

With John at the peak, there’s nobody to assist me right now. 

I have to do it. I take a deep breath. I look around. 

    Stop shaking and do this!

I take another deep breath and overreach for the only available little ledge that can support my effort up the rock face. 

It’s a stretch, as they say, but I’m able to reach it.

A couple minutes later, I’m standing at the peak with John. 

    Wow, what a view!

Of course, at that point in my life I understood the thrill mountaineers find in their sport. Indeed, on our way back down from the peak, it becomes clear that John chose to make this an adventure for me because we could have avoided the rock face completely and just walked up the peak on a ridge with a gentle slope! 

I’ve now lived in the Wild West for over half a century, so I remain fond of our mountains. I just don’t want to “climb” any more of them. Also, I should note I retained not a single photograph from that experience. But that doesn’t matter now, I know I can still tell the story in vivid words which “take” their own pictures.

* * *


satellite views southeastern slope of Colorado’s Williams Mountain

    
It is easy to forget that light to photographers, like language
to writers, is their only means of artistic expression. 
Without an understanding of language, combined with
imagination and intuition, occasional strings of lyrical words
are little more than intermittent accidents.
So are photographs made without understanding
the language of light.”

– Galen Rowell

* * *

While we were in college, magazines were in their heyday. Many young writers and photographers enrolled at Florida’s well-respected journalism school hoped to grab a career-boosting byline or photo-credit in a major national magazine. 

BTW, nobody would have thought to call these periodicals “zines” in those days. The internet was three decades into the future and nobody had a clue as to what a dam-busting watershed moment that would be for journalism and personal communication, in general. By-The-Way, nobody would have written “BTW” back then either. 

Life and Look were the two major competing weekly photo news-feature magazines at that time. They were able to show more detailed human-interest stories than either Time or Newsweek, the other more text-oriented news magazines of the day. 

Each publication took a different approach to visual storytelling. Look Magazine also featured the lush All-American illustrations of Norman Rockwell, who’d gained fame with his weekly Saturday Evening Post covers. Rockwell was a unique picture-storyteller.

Rockwell depicted a very clear story in each of his static pictures – all details visible within the frame of his single illustration for that week. For how meticulously he crafted his frames, see article on Rockwell’s “triple-selfie” pictured above: here.

Life Magazine, in particular, offered photojournalists a unique chance to tell stories a lot like filmmakers – in a logical linear sequence of pictures. Life photographers, like those at National Geographic, emphasized their roving journalistic instincts. They went into raw situations or unfamiliar venues as real journalists following the scent of a story, sniffing out its details. In his look at “Life Classic Photographs: A Personal Interpretation”, author John Loengard puts it this way:

Journalism does not impose on a photographer the same demands it does on other artists. A writer or a painter when working as a journalist has to count and measure and check the accuracy of each physical fact he reports. The camera does this automatically for the photographer. Journalism extends the photographer’s range of subject without altering his basic working methods, and gives him the opportunity to conduct his business – which is looking – without apology.”

* * *

To Look at Life“Without Apology”

For the last nine months, I’ve been photographing the slow demolition of a 12-story steel and concrete building down the street from our house. I’ve kept the camera charged and the tripod ready, legs extended out full. So I can just grab the camera bag, grab the ‘pod and get out the door whenever my ears inform me that the high-rise demolition machines are getting active again.

As I covered this on-going event, I recalled mountain-man John Lindstrom’s picture-story lectures. I also recalled the great Magnum photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson, who considered photography an art that seeks “to preserve life in the act of living” because photographers “deal in things which are continually vanishing.”

My Panasonic Lumix GH5 is a modern marvel, a hybrid computerized camera – it can shoot video, stills or a combination of both. So what I’ve been making became less a picture-story and more a long-form video montage of a too-tall eyesore in our neighborhood vanishing right before our eyes.

But I used the same still-picture story-strategy when shooting these videos: I observed the scene as a photo-essayist would, searching for the most significant details to mold the static pictures into a full story. It all starts, and continues, from that perspective – serious observation of what unfolds in front of me, letting the story tell itself.

Also, it helps to draw a distinction here between street photography” and “photojournalism” … While a street photographer may be content with a spectacularly spontaneous single frame before moving onward, photojournalists learn to “hang out” at the venue of their stories – thinking beyond a few single frames, prepared to consider how each frame relates to other shots that come before and after it in the developing photo-story sequence. We previously looked at photojournalism in an essay recalling the great diary-filmmaker, Jonas Mekas: here.

* * *

The picture-story involves a joint operation of the brain, the eye
and the heart. The objective of this joint operation is to depict
the content of some event which is in the process of unfolding, 
and to communicate impressions … You must be on the alert with
the brain, the eye, the heart: and have a suppleness of body.”

– Henri Cartier-Bresson

* * *

Here are primary considerations any street-savvy photojournalist needs to turn into intuitive practice by doing it repeatedly, until we don’t have to think about it:

FLY-ON-THE-WALL Approach: A good photojournalist needs to stay unobtrusive

when approaching subjects in the wild – striving for stealth, hoping to be a fly-on-the-wall. This means not calling attention to our work while doing it. Hiding-in-plain-sight is the goal, so the story can tell itself while we try to stay out of the way. 

FRAMING the Pictures: Photojournalists do not take “snapshots”. The full surface

area of the picture is valuable so every centimeter of every frame needs to be held to account. Photographers follow other visual artists when we rely on compositional techniques like “Leading Lines”, “Geometric Juxtapositions”, “The Rule of Thirds”, “The Rule of Odds” or “Symmetry” to frame a picture. The best way to learn this way of seeing is to spend lots of time in museums, galleries and books, evaluating paintings by great artists and photos by great photographers (see listing of books at “Furthermore” at the end of this essay). John Lindstrom’s slide shows certainly instilled, by example, this understanding in his students.

FRAMING the Story: Also, a photographer must be a good image juggler, like a

muse-in-seine attending to the compositional elements of balance, contrast, focus, motion, pattern, proportion, rhythm and unity to order the static images into a linear movement, like moving through a series of galleries. This kind of framing not only happens at the scene of the shoot, but also in post-production assembly of the images into a sequence.

TIMING: Being in The-Right-Spot-At-The-Right-Time is a skill often left to  

intuition.  Are we quitting too soon, packing up to leave before the “story” has “ended”? Bring snacks and water, take sufficient bathroom breaks. Be prepared to stay until “The Very End”, whatever we may perceive that to be intuitively, in the moment of observing the story as it unfolds. This kind of work takes enormous patience – as photographers, we must learn to tell our-own-impatient-selves: “Wait for it!” … Cartier-Bresson’s comments on “the decisive moment”further clarify the necessity of “At-The-Right-Time”.

DEADLINES: It’s difficult for photojournalists to determine when we’re actually 

done” with an assignment. Sports photographers have an advantage in that they know when ball games should predictably end. News photographers often have deadlines which determine when they must leave the scene of a story. But for artists working outside deadlines, it can be difficult to tell our first takes from the last. 

Nobody wants to “miss the money shot” … so patience must become the leading virtue for this kind of work.  As Cartier-Bresson points out: 

The photographer must make sure, while he is still in the presence of the unfolding scene, that he hasn’t left any gaps, that he has really given expression to the meaning of the scene in its entirety, for afterward it is too late. He is never able to wind the scene backward in order to photograph it all over again.”

* * *


Magnum photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson

Indeed, another way to see this would be that the photographer is “developing” the story. In the Twentieth Century, photographers shot film that literally needed to be chemically developed before any latent images could became present. We all knew film takes time. 

But in a digital world, there’s no waiting for anything to develop. The light has spoken to the camera’s sensor the instant it was captured, and that’s that but for the computer color-grading. No mess, no chemicals. No waiting on The Lab. Half a day can quickly disappear in a darkroom. Film developing takes hours to process and dry. Then photo prints need to be made from film negatives, one at a time in another slow chemical process. 

The traditional still image has been repurposed in mirrorless cameras like mine that function as video and still cameras, or a hybrid of both. Most modern tv programs and movies have several freeze-frame, or pixilated moments to connote time passing – as a quick replacement for a montage to move the story forward. These “shots” are all done on these hybrid cameras. Also, I imagine our old journalism school no longer maintains the expense of a darkroom. Leave that to the history department!

Anyone interested in seeing how all this fits together on a screen can see my current project – all shot mostly on 4K video. Like a baby, the project took nine months to develop and I had to learn how to deal with intimidating work flow issues. Digital files of 4K clips take tons of memory and hard drive space. This project forced me to learn how to shoot, import, edit and post video like a tv news crew.  Credit goes to YouTube video gurus: Ryan Harris, Caleb Pike, Gerald Undone, Caleb Hoover, Robin Wong, Dale Sood, Lizzie Peirce, Tom Buck, and the Everyday Dad.

You can see those videos here (a dozen shorts – total time under 50 minutes):


 the author says “cheese” at job-site of Six Fifty One Pine video project
[photo by Matt Delaney]

* * *

FURTHERMORE:


Manchester, William. In Our Time: The World As Seen by Magnum Photographers. New York: Norton, 1989. 

National Gallery of Art. On the Art of Fixing a Shadow: One Hundred and Fifty Years of Photography. Boston: Little Brown/Bulfinch Press, 1989.

Leongard, John. Life Classic Photographs: A Personal Interpretation. Boston: Little Brown, 1988.

Rowell, Galen. Mountain Light. Covelo CA: Yolla Bolly Press, 1986.

Del Valle, J. Bourke.  Brassaï. New York: Museum of Modern Art, 1968.

Kirstein, Lincoln. W. Eugene Smith. New York: Aperture, 1969.

Kismaric, Carole.  André Kertész.  New York: Aperture, 1977.

Phillips, Sandra S. André Kertész of Paris and New York. New York: Thames and Hudson, 1985.

Heyman, Therese Thau. Celebrating a Collection of The Work of Dorothea Lange. Oakland, CA: Oakland Museum, 1978.

Maddow, Ben. The Photography of Max Yavno. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1981.

Thompson, Jerry L.  Walker Evans at Work. New York: Harper & Row, 1982.

Adams, Ansel. An Autobiography. Boston: Little Brown, 1986.

Binder, Walter. Jacques-Henri Lartigue Album. Bern: Benteli Verlag, 1986.

Riboud, Marc. Photographs at Home and Abroad. New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1986.

Haworth-Booth, Mark. Paul Strand. New York: Aperture, 1987.

Galassi, Peter. Henri Cartier-Bresson: The Early Work. New York: MOMA, 1987.

Cravens, R.H. Edward Weston. New York: Aperture, 1988.

Alinder, Mary Street.  Group f.64: Weston, Adams and Cunningham, the Community of Artists who Revolutionized American Photography.  New York: Bloomsbury, 2014.

Editors of Time-Life Books. Documentary Photography: Revised Edition. Alexandria, Va.: Time-Life Books, 1983.

Rhode, Robert B. and McCall, Floyd H. Press Photography: Reporting with a Camera. New York: Macmillan, 1961.

Lyons, Nathan. Photographers on Photography. Englewood Cliffs N.J., Prentice-Hall, 1966.

Sontag, Susan. On Photography. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1973.

Sloane, Eric. Our Vanishing Landscape. New York: Ballantine, 1974.

The Norman Rockwell Museum, Stockbridge, Massachusetts. 
https://www.nrm.org/about/

Some good street photography tips from B&H
https://youtu.be/kbZYkZLJfVw
(12:41)

Saturday, October 22, 2022

Mike Leigh

 

Mike Leigh – master of hard-scripted improvisations


Mike Leigh’s Method:

Actors Making It All Up!

by Jamie Jobb

Imagine you’re an actor and you get a personal note from Mike Leigh: “I’d like to have you work in my next film.” Of course you say “Yes!” because actors seek these prized roles with the acclaimed writer/director/producer from the United Kingdom. 

Whatever these roles may be.

That’s the whole point with a Mike Leigh acting assignment. The director knows who he wants to work with when he begins a film. He just doesn’t have much of an idea who his characters are or what the story may be. That’s premature speculation at this point in Leigh’s process. It’s just enough for him in the beginning to know who each actor is. 

Each actor does not know any other actor involved with Leigh on the project at this point of these collaborations. The actor simply works alone with Leigh developing a single character from a list of people the actor knows. They also work through a set of improv exercises to determine which character they feel is most worthy of development. 

Once a single character is chosen, the actor gets to work alone with Leigh for another two or three months developing that character’s backstory, movement, speech patterns and other bits of nuance needed to bring the character to complete fruition.

Note that at this point, nobody is talking about story … only a single character’s development, one-on-one, actor-with-director.  At the same time, Leigh has been working with his other actors this way --- each of them using the same method of character development based on individuals each actor knowsOnce Leigh is convinced his actors know their characters, he introduces them into rehearsals where they improvise scenes in character.

After a few weeks of developing the story in this manner, the improvisations are shaped into a shooting script. From that point on the story and the text are locked in for the actors to develop in front of the camera.

This is why Leigh films contain a level of actorly involvement unknown in other writer’s works. This is why his early films said “devised by instead of “written by Leigh. Rather than spend more time on the man’s methods, let’s look at his individual films to get a sense of the kinds of characters and situations come out of this unique kind of actor/writer collaboration … 

* * *

Mike Leigh Films: Short Reviews


(NOTE: These short-form reviews for motion pictures
rely on actual lines within the film to briefly critique
the movie itself. The rest of the details are built around 
these key quotations – including characters, occupations,
locations, situations and other elements of plot.
The point is to have the film tell its own story
in its own words” without revealing too much
so you may be intrigued enough to riddle it out.)

* * *

Anne Raitt imagines her dinner date without trousers

Bleak Moments (1971)

One top and two bottoms, like a beauty queen at a freak show.”  Sylvia (Anne Raitt) is chartered accountant’s secretary who tolerates grim world of London’s South Norwood pebble-dash in her Bronte bun and Mona Lisa smile. Sylvia’s retarded sister Hilda (Sarah Stephenson) is a bit dopey”and demands constant care. Sylvia’s latent mate Peter (Eric Allan) is a teacher who gets very angry with waiters who, well, don’t do their job.” 

Peter may have trouble balancing coffee, sherry and smoke on his knee; but at least he understands the usual conversational gambits don’t seem to be any use.” (scene link below)  Sylvia refills Peter’s sherry brimming to the rim.  I was just saying something to you in my head, it was quite amusing. I was saying to you: take your trousers off.”

Their lonely night out getting grilled by grumbling waiter (Ronald Eng) in drab Chinese restaurant may be most painfully funny sad-sack food scene ever filmed.  This no enough for two people! It’s one, one, one, one, one!” Sylvia’s sole office mate Pat (Joolia Cappleman) cares for Hilda, believesJesus was a faith healer” and admits she might be getting married next year, about January.” Pat’s Mum (Liz Smith) frets over missing dentures while Pat admonishes: You can’t have them on show. They’re not an ornament.” 

Muffled mimeographer Norman (Mike Bradwell) prints student magazine and plays tuneless guitar in Sylvia’s garage.  You know, it’s not so easy to know what it is you really do … want to do.” Based on his original play, Leigh dislodges creeping avalanche of painful stillborn pregnant pauses as minds grind, tongues bite, eyes ricochet off floors and walls.  I find it easier watching the radio.”

Out-of-tune E-flat Chopin Nocturne echoes off softbound Wuthering Heights, Freight Train Goin’ So Fast roars past This Little Piggy Went To Market, and is The Medium Really The Message? Or Does your daddy wear glasses?” All that remains is a neoclassical perspective: “It’s just like Romeo and Juliet all over again, isn’t it Hilda?” (British)


Brief coffee-smoke-and-sherry scene:
(13:37)

* * *


house-cleaner Liz Smith knows what makes it select

Hard Labour (1973)

Flaming women! You’re all the blood same. That’s the trouble with ya. And you can’t get through this bloody kitchen, a-tall.” Careful Catholic house-cleaner Mrs. Thronley (Liz Smith) believes “I don’t love people enough” while she dusts and polishes High Broughton home of Mrs. Stone (Vanessa Harris).  I’m not gonna do any housework.  I’ve got enough to do.”

Then she returns home to cobbled maze of mews in Salford back-to-backs where she starts all over again in her own home.  Well, you know it goes on, but there you go, you know.”  Although toy-warehouse security-guard Mr. Thornley (Clifford Kershaw) knows the company rules”, he guards plastic ducks on graveyard shift in his tight shoes, suffers a bit of rheumatism” in his shoulders, and likes to drink, it flushes me kidneys out”.

Vowel-stretching A-1 taxi driver Naseem (Ben Kingsley) arranges quickie abortions on Indian time. Look, they’re half hanging on.”  Leigh’s grindstone view of labor underfoot rides uplift of confessional newsprint, faded floral wallpaper, purple passion bra, broom-handle alarm clock, scrambled eggs and shocking” cheese. I like it because every house is just that bit individual. You know what I mean? They’re all a little bit different, makes it more select. See that wall. Not all the houses have got those.” (British)


Full feature:
(1:10:17)

* * *

The Pratts search for free-range eggs

Nuts in May (1976)

This is a portable barometer, a bit like a traveling clock, really … in the middle of the night if you wake up, want to know the time, turn over and all you find out is whether it’s fair or foul.”  The Pratts – social-service administrator Keith (Roger Solman) and toyshop clerk Candice-Marie (Alison Steadman) -- are self-satisfied vegetarian city-dwellers who ride chugging Morris Minor coupe on cramped camping holiday in Dorset, just to get away from the hurly-burly of living in an urban conurbation” of Croydon. 

Lovely to have species all around you!” They seek untreated milk” and self-service free-range eggs” while packing maximum/minimum thermometer and stage-seven fly sheet”. “Society gets what society wants.”  Candice-Marie seems to have a morbid interest in where the dungeons are”, while Keith chews his nuts 72 times before swallowing.  No killer whites in our tent!” 

Excruciating hilarious pedantic hootenanny thrusts urban zealots inflicted with “The Country Code” onto less conscientious fellow campers Ray (Anthony O’Donnell), Honky (Sheila Kelley) and Finger (Stephen Bill).  Litter makes us shiver.”  Leigh paints lunatic landscape of muddy dinosaur footprints, flashlight apology and vapid I-want-to-see-the-zoo-she-said” sing-a-longs. If I could take one of your lungs now and put it on the table in front of you and cut it in half, I think that you would be absolutely horrified.”  (British)


Full feature:
(1:20:52)


* * *

Kay Adshead wants a good snogging – upstairs

The Kiss of Death (1977)

You don’t know how lucky you are, Trev. You got security, no clocking in, nobody standing over ya, and you get paid for it as well. So when you retire, you have a good pension. And finally, when you pass away, you get a free funeral, on the firm.”  Lancashire undertaker’s apprentice and hearse driver Trevor (David Threlfall) is “a bit scruffy”, doesn’t like disco, and looks “like a Cheshire cat, leering like that”.

His best friend Ronnie (John Wheatley) and his Betty-Boop mate Sandra (Angela Curran) are getting a bit sick of him keep tagging on with us” to their pub dates.  Undertaker’s joke: Q -- How’s your wife?” A -- I worship the ground that’s coming to her.” So Sandra introduces him to gum-chewing shoe-shop clerk Linda (Kay Adshead) who wants to know if Trevor is deaf as well as daft”because “The last time you asked me out, you didn’t turn up. Did ya?” 

Although she later admits he can Kiss me if you like”, Linda’s sights are dead set for snogging”, not on her sofa like kids, but upstairs in bed like real adults. Trevor, however, seems more concerned with “Jaws,” “Dracula,” and “Hello Dolly” -- not to mention real-life crib death. There’s no short time in this business.”  (British)


Full feature:
unavailable

* * *

Is Alison Steadman’s red dress ready for simultaneous parties?

Abigail’s Party (1977)

Not everyone can like everything, can they?” Beverly Moss (Alison Steadman) is wannabe voluptuous hostess who has her dream: just to lie on a beach sipping Bacardi and Coke.”  Husband Laurence (Tim Stern) is real-estate agent who enjoys light classical music, fine art reproductions and Complete Works of Shakespeare because they’re part of our heritage. ‘Course they’re not something you can actually read”.

Together they host three Richmond Road neighbors for constricted cocktail party of stiff seduction. Drinking into oblivion with them are chirpy nurse Angela (Janine Duvitski) and her sullen husband Tony (John Salthouse), ex-professional soccer player now employed as computer operator.  Oh yes, he’s very quick-tempered. I think it’s because of his red hair.”

Joining couples is solo and troubled divorced mom of two, Susan Lawson (Harriet Reynolds), whose 15-year-old Abigail holds her own party next door.  You don’t know who you get at a party, and let’s face it, people ARE light-fingered.”  (British).


* * *



Who’s Who (1979)

Your work is the rent you pay for the room you occupy on earth.” Stilted stockbroker and celebrity autograph-hound Alan Dixon (Richard Kane) is a professional man” who prides himself on his royal refusals” and his “Tree of Great Britain”. Regularly, he pops round to Buckingham gates to catch glimpse of Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, aka H.R.H. 

Well, what are your feelings about Petula Clark?” Alan’s idiosyncratic chinchilla cat-breeder wife April (Joolia Cappleman) prides herself on good grooming.  If you went round there Alan, and you saw the way she overcrowds her cat houses, you really would be shocked. Why I have only got to write a letter to the governing council of Cat Fancy and they’d be round there like a shot!”

Feline photographer Mr. Shakespeare (Sam Kelly) also takes his shots in the Dixon parlor. “By the way, did you know there was a famous writer called Shakespeare?”  Meanwhile Alan’s coworkers Nigel Carlisle (Simon Chandler) is so capable” in the kitchen that roguish roommate Giles (Adam Norton) plans Saturday night dinner party.  Now the seating’s all wrong!” Leigh’s hilarious and harrowing Stock Market potboiler simmers with Fur And Feather, Pak-A-Pet, “Rhythmic Roberto”, Newton’s balls and “This is Your Life”.  There’s no joy in being a plantation worker anymore.”(British)

* * *

Lindsay Duncan is dissatisfied physical education teacher

Grown-Ups (1980)


Now look, your brother-in-law’s gone away, everything’s quiet and there’s absolutely no reason why you shouldn’t come out. This is a decent Christian household.” Bull-nosed jabberwocky clerk-typist Gloria (Brenda Blethyn) really is a bit aeriated”. So no wonder she runs from rejection at Mum’s house to swarm her newly-wed younger sister’s council house before bolting to neighbor’s upstairs bathroom, where she promptly locks herself in.

Cafe-waitress sister Mandy (Lesley Manville) doesn’t need to be told her home could use a clean”. All she really wants is her own baby. But hospital orderly brother-in-law Dick (Philip Davis) hasn’t got a great deal to say for himself”.  Their new neighbor Ralph “Old Butler” (Sam Kelly) taught them both Religious Knowledge in high school, but now he owns private row-house next door. While his dissatisfied wife Christine (Lindsay Duncan) teachers physical education, all she really knows is: I want sex. I want love. I want a family.” 

Leigh’s latter-day Canterbury tale gathers rumbling grunts and tics that eventually gush in family scrum on Butler staircase to conjure “Life Before Man”, Loch Ness Monster, dinosaur nutcracker, Hoover uprights and Good riddance to bad rubbish”There’s more life in my back garden than there is in Canterbury.”  “Your back garden IS Canterbury!” (British)

Full feature:
(1:32:41)

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Kay Stonham invites postman in for tea

Home Sweet Home (1982)


You wouldn’t understand, women have problems. Live with somebody all your life, they don’t know anything about you.” “I’ve had my moments!” Going Postal in Hertfordshire are three hopeless bicycle postmen and Royal Mail sorters: two married, one not.  You wanna be careful.” 

Postman No. 1: three-way two-timer Stan (Eric Richard) knows my wife ran off with some geezer”, but he never bothered to get divorced – one fact not lost on his estranged daughter Tina (Lorraine Brunning). Postman No. 2: couch potato Gordon Leach (Timothy Spall) splits loggerheads with barrelhouse wife Hazel (Kay Stonham) who was a big girl when I was twelve” and now is just havin’ a good shakeout” while hubby whimpers I ain’t fat! I ain’t fat!”  Postman No. 3: impractical jokester Harold Fish (Tim Barker) is insufferable nitwit who can’t comprehend cuckold grip of cold fish wife June (Su Elliott). 

Did you hear about the Irish postman? He was looking for a round letterbox because he had to deliver a circular.”  So who could blame Stan for popping in on” his coworkers’ wives? “You know, Stanley, a lot of deviant behavior is caused by insecurity.” Oh, to sing I Did It My Way, not Lipstick on Your Collar. To Ask: Does your wife get you up in the morning?” not “What’s the kettle for?”  Prince Charles is a postman: he’s The Royal Male.” (British)


Short scene:
(10:43)

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Tim Roth and Gary Oldman make the worst of public housing

Meantime (1983)

An anthill which can be as big as a man, as big as three men, begins as a single grain of sand, OK. Time passes .. the single grain becomes the ant hill .. It’s like repairs, ya know? Small things become big things. And what I’m saying is, it helps us if you tell us about the grain of sand, OK? Don’t wait to tell us about the ant hill, yeah.” “ … We got ants?”

Young East End layabout Colin Pollock (Tim Roth) isn’t as daft” as he looks, but can’t fry an egg, never mind decorate a bedroom”. His bitter brother Mark (Phil Daniels) is too smart for your own good, you are.” And their unemployed ex-brakeman Dad, Frank (Jeff Robert) believes It’s not my fault I ain’t got no job.” With all three men in her life on the dole, Mum Mavis (Pam Ferris) loses herself in Bingo to tolerate their London high-rise oblivion. 

You got to decorate, haven’t you? It’s no excuse to live in squalor.” Mavis’ well-to-do Chigwell sister Barbara (Marion Bailey) doesn’t try to sound posh”, although her husband John (Alfred Molina) hasn’t got much time for Mavis and her family”.  Skittish skinhead Coxy (Gary Oldman) is rude boy” who head-butts lamp-post and faces bleak future in tin drum. Don’t talk to me about money, I used to work in a bank.” Leigh punctuates early Thatcher pathos with double-baked beans, rotten windows, billowing litter and perpetual pub haze of darts, billiards and beer. Our job is to help you, yeah. And it helps us to help you if you help us, OK?”  (British)


Full feature RENTAL:
(1:47:24)

* * * 

Irish wonder it was their country in the first place

Four Days in July (1985)

We came from here, we went to Scotland and then we came back again. So it was our country in the first place! Ulster!” Three expectant first-time-fathers fidget in waiting room for they know that’s women’s business” in delivery room. Outside, armed British troops scrutinize Belfast’s business in broad daylight. Expectant Protestant wife Lorraine (Paula Hamilton) is so big she can’t reach the taps”. Her husband, Tenth Battalion Ulster Defence Regiment soldier Billy (Charles Lawson), keeps his gun on kitchen shelf and his hands on cans of lager.  I do wanna get full tonight, but I don’t wanna get full at your granny’s.”

Expectant Catholic wife Collette (Brid Breenan) knows it will be a while before I can wear a grass skirt”. Her crippled husband Eugene (Des McAleer) is eternal optimist, although he has more holes than a dart board” from three old innocent-bystander battle scars.  Stop boasting, Eugene.”

Although it’s difficult at times to decode these thick North Irish brogues, Leigh’s first foreign language movie” provides stunning snapshot of not-so-Great-Britain’s very uncivil war.  Can’t you (males) all go live on an island without us?” “We ARE living on an island!”

Visceral view of lives overshadowed by oxygen mask and bonfire song, dueling flags and “The Patriot Game”, Falls Road baby carriage and plumbers don’t like summers” -- although they can turn toilets into stills.  Like, one rat you can handle. But it’s the thought of a whole army of them that I can’t stand.” One of the most unlikely anti-war comedies of my experience.  You wonder how they did it, wouldn’t ya, in those wee houses.” (Ireland)

Full feature: unavailable

* * *

Ruth Sheen and Philip Davis learn you must speculate to accumulate

High Hopes (1988)

What made this country great was a place for everyone and everyone in his place. And this is my place.”  Feeling a bit vague” as she faces 70th birthday, old Mrs. Bender (Edna Dore) could be better”. Her long-term Bethnal Green council flat has become last bastion in gentrified row where class warfare is fought over a lick of paint” and lost keys.  Working-class Tories, stabbing themselves in the back.” 

Her scruffy messenger son Cyril (Philip Davis) is “scared of gettin’ bitter” and believes families ain’t no use any more”The day they machine-gun the Royal Family, I’ll comb me hair and put a tie on.”  His true love, park landscape worker Shirley (Ruth Sheen) only hopes I don’t have a kid that’s a bit thick.”  Cyril’s chortling sister, Valerie Burke (outrageous Heather Tobias), has been having a breakdown for the last twenty years” and isn’t about to quit now. Her philander husband, used car and burger dealer Martin (Philip Jackson) is the jerk in the Merc” who believes you gotta speculate to accumulate”.

Mrs. Bender’s aptly-named next-door-Yuppies, The Booth-Braines -- Laetitia (Lesley Manville) and Rupert (David Bamber) -- patronize opera and donate wine to mentally-handicapped-something-or-other” charity. Oh, look what they’ve done to your coal hole, Mum!”  Leigh’s caustic post-Thatcher satire strikes bullseye of brass banana, neon house-number, Karl Marx’ Highgate grave and I said, it’s the top of the world.” It’s amazing what you can do with a slum, isn’t it?” (British)

* * *

Timothy Spall plans nouveau menu from hell

Life is Sweet (1990)

It just sits in a drawer. Out of the drawer, into the peas. Stir the custard, into the wash. Out of the wash, up on the hooks with all the other spoons. And all the time, just waiting for the fatal day when it’d drastically alter the course of a man’s life.” Chirpy Enfield working-class wife Wendy (Alison Steadman) is dance teacher, kids-boutique clerk, volunteer waitress and steadfast mother who’dlove another little baby”. Her still-at-home twins are polar opposites: Natalie (Claire Skinner) is single and carefree” plumber who wears men’s shirts and dreams of Yank tour sans-Disney, while her vacant” twin Nicola (Jane Horrocks) is bitter home-bound chocoholic anoretic who bathes twice a day, but knows enough” about men.  You’d frighten the birds, you would.”

Plugger industrial-catering husband Andy (Jim Broadbent) still dreams of owning his own business while stalling all home improvements.  You wouldn’t see me for dust, I tell you.” Unemployed pub pal Patsy (Stephen Rea) sells Andy dilapidated scrapyard “Hot Snacks” van, while mega-confident”kitchen magician” Aubrey (Timothy Spall) opens Regret Rien with nouveau menu from hell – prune quiche, pork cyst, liver in lager, clams in ham, tongues in a rhubarb hollandaise and chilled brains (They speak for themselves”).

I want this restaurant to be built on a one-to-one, mouth-to-mouth reputation, y’know?” “Those tongues are a pain in the neck.” Leigh’s moving impression of families and food offers tea and sympathy, Piaf and accordions, orthopedic passion pit and “Bollocks to the Poll Tax!”  Ronald McDonald had to start somewhere, didn’t he?” (British)


* * *

Lynda Steadman and Katrin Cartlidge get the Bronte of everything

Career Girls (1997)

If we could be a combination, we’d be the perfect woman, wouldn’t we?” Turning 30, two North London Poly chums and ex-roommates, both of them now office drones, reunite at Kings Cross for weekend of coincidental reminiscing. Snappy ironic Hannah Mills (Katrin Cartlidge) has remained in London while twitchy asthmatic Annie (Lynda Steadman) lives in Yorkshire with her mom. They throw” Wuthering Heights like the I Ching. 

The Bronte sisters – we always get the brunt of everything.” Ex-roommate Clare (Kate Byers) and ex-lover Adrian Spinks (Joe Tucker) don’t recognize them. Tortured truth-telling ex-friend Ricky Burton (Mark Benton) still holds a grudge. I’m not an idiot. I’m an idiot savant. I just haven’t found my savant yet.” They listen to The Cure, but can’t find one anywhere.  We’re all like the center of our own … attention.” “Well, that’s better than being in a detention center, which is where I could have ended up, let’s face it.”  (British)


* * *

Furthermore


Best book on Mike Leigh’s method:
The Improvised Play: The Work of Mike Leigh” - an account by Paul Clements - Methuen Theatrefile Books (1983) 


Roger Ebert reviews of Leigh films:



Mike Leigh’s Master Class at Reykjavik International Film Festival (hour and a half)
https://youtu.be/pLNcZArEqL8

Naked” (two hours and 12 minutes):
https://youtu.be/gMwzvAt84P8

https://theflickeringmoment.wordpress.com/2014/10/24/hard-labour-1973/

https://lightsinthedusk.blogspot.com/2009/06/hard-labour-1973.html

https://www.the-medium-is-not-enough.com/2012/12/the_wednesday_play_nuts_in_may_1976.php

https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2017/nov/02/abigails-party-nancy-banks-smith-review-1977

https://cinematrices.wordpress.com/2009/02/04/whos-who-mike-leigh-1979/

https://cinematrices.wordpress.com/2009/01/26/grown-ups-mike-leigh-1980/

https://worldscinema.org/2017/03/mike-leigh-play-for-today-home-sweet-home-1982/

http://thecinemaarchives.com/2019/11/03/meantime-1983-leigh/

http://anozuaday.blogspot.com/2013/05/mike-leigh.html

https://www.criterion.com/films/27982-life-is-sweet